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FIFA gives Ghana three months to reform


GNA | Posted: Tuesday, April 05, 2005

World's Football Governing Body FIFA says appointment of government nominees to the Ghana Football Association (GFA) board - which should consist solely of democratically-elected members - will no longer be tolerated.

It has subsequently asked the GFA secretary to forward a roadmap that will effect the needed changes within three months.

A BBC report said FIFA has ordered an overhaul of the statutes of the Ghana Football Association (GFA).

It has ruled that the current GFA structure has done serious harm to the administration of the game. "The architecture of the GFA statutes is extremely complex with the superposition of three bodies, the Congress, the Executive Council and the Management Board," said FIFA's Deputy General-Secretary Jerome Champagne in a letter dated March 23 to GFA Secretary Kofi Nsiah.

"There should be legislative (congress), executive (executive committee) and judicial (disciplinary and appeal committees), as is the case in FIFA, Confederations and football associations around the world," Champagne advised.

FIFA also expressed its unhappiness with the decision of GFA Chairman Dr Nyaho Nyaho-Tamakloe to take his battle with a group of stakeholders, who want him ousted as GFA boss, to the courts.

The GFA's 37-man executive council passed a vote of no confidence in Nyaho-Tamakloe last year, which prompted him to take the matter to a high court in Accra.

"Recent violations cannot be tolerated any longer by FIFA," the letter warned. It stated further that FIFA requests the Ghana FA to launch a process to redraft its statutes in the coming three months.

"This process should take place quickly ... FIFA would be grateful to the GFA to propose a detailed timeline for the completion of the various steps of this process.

"Immediately after the ratification of those new statutes by an extraordinary (GFA) congress, elections will be organised based on this new text and under the supervision of FIFA and CAF.

"Too much time has been lost in unnecessary and counter-productive political and legal infighting within and around the GFA," Champagne said.

But the infighting within the GFA could delay the articulation of a roadmap, as Nyaho-Tamakloe told BBC Sport that he has not seen FIFA's letter, a week after it was reportedly sent.

GFA Vice Chairman Kwesi Nyantekye told the GNA Sports yesterday that the association was scheduled to hold a meeting on the issues raised by FIFA in the letter believed to be with Mr Nsiah today, April 5.

"For now, I cannot comment on the letter until I have fully read the content", Mr Nyantekye told the GNA.


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